In the congested waters of the Indo-Pacific and the Baltic, a new predator is emerging. It doesn’t weigh thousands of tons or carry a crew of hundreds. Instead, it’s a ‘swarm’—a cloud of low-cost, expendable drones designed to overwhelm, distract, and dismantle an adversary’s defense in seconds. This is the ‘Swarm-and-Seize’ doctrine, and it’s changing the face of the U.S. Marine Corps. #tech #technology #military
Under the ambitious Force Design 2030, the Marines are shifting away from heavy tanks to become a ‘Stand-in Force.’ These agile, small units operate deep within the enemy’s weapon engagement zone, and their primary weapon is the drone. Gone are the days of million-dollar missiles for every target. Today, a single Marine squad can launch a coordinated wave of FPV and loitering munitions, like the new Bolt-M, for a fraction of the cost.
But ‘Swarm-and-Seize’ isn’t just about destruction. In high-stakes maritime intercepts, these swarms act as the ultimate distraction. While hundreds of micro-drones saturate a ship’s radar and foul its sensors, Marine Raiders can execute a boarding operation with total surprise. By the time the enemy clears the digital ‘noise,’ the ship has already been seized.
This isn’t science fiction—it’s active testing. From the Wave Breaker exercises to new ‘Drone Task Force’ summits, the Corps is currently training 400 new operators every month. As General Berger once said, ‘You hit somebody with your fist and not with your fingers spread.’ In 2026, that fist is made of silicon, carbon fiber, and a thousand synchronized points of light.
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Credit to : US Marine Corps
Credit to : US Military Channel
